In this poem, "This is a woman's world," Eavan Boland ironically respects the role of women in society. Thousands of years have passed, but she thinks women are still inferior. She supports this view with simple short words that convey self-condemning irony and anger for the role that women are being forced to men. The poem is divided into 14 sections, each with 4 rows. If there is no structured rhyme, the opposite row and clause flow into each other to form a sentence.
Eavan Boland's poet often abandons rhymes, but focuses on word selection and word usage on the page. In the poem "Anorexia", Eavan Boland will soon begin with a short and thin spell. And it may shock the reader. She initially claimed that "the body is an alien, my body is a witch, I am burning it." A few words give randomness and an end tone. Later, Eavan Boland used this short sponsorship to parallel themes with poetic anorexia. Her poetry is very thin throughout the process as anorexia is the condition that causes the victim to be thinner. If these sections look strange or unnatural for the reader, it only strengthens the theme of poetry. Praise is not broken by punctuation marks, but gives the reader an impression of the flow of consciousness. She described it as "winter, moon, wet
In this poem, "This is a woman's world," Eavan Boland ironically respects the role of women in society. Thousands of years have passed, but she thinks women are still inferior. She supports this view with simple short words that convey self-condemning irony and anger for the role that women are being forced to men. The poem is divided into 14 sections, each with 4 rows. If there is no structured rhyme, the opposite row and clause flow into each other to form a sentence.